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Film: The Assassination of Jesse James By the
Coward Robert Ford
Studio: Warner Bros. Pictures
Director: Andrew Dominik
Principal
Actors: Brad Pitt, Casey Affleck, Sam
Rockwell
Release: 2007; On DVD released February 5, 2008
Film
length: 160 minutes
Rating:
R for strong violence and brief sexual references
3 ½ Stars
Reviewer: Deborah Ground Buckner
Cinematographer
Roger Deakins deserves first mention in regard to The Assassination of Jesse James By the Coward Robert Ford. This film has some of the most beautiful
images I have seen in a long time.
Deakins fully captures the world of Jesse James, from its barren plains,
desolate farmsteads and sweeping railroad tracks with desperadoes waiting to
ambush.
But
it is a good thing the film is so visually pleasing, because its story tends to
become tedious. At times, the pacing is
incredibly slow, and the voice-over narration often serves to stop the story
rather than keep it moving along. There
is a feeling that at times director (and screenwriter) Andrew Dominik lost the
focus of how he intended to tell the story and became stuck, so quickly faded
out, and cued the narrator to enter.
That
being said, the story itself is a very interesting one. Outlaw Jesse James' glory days are behind
him. Even brother Frank (Sam Shephard)
has abandoned the gang, appearing only in the beginning of the film. Jesse (Brad Pitt) holds on to remnants of his
old gang and recruits new members, but there is very little activity for
them. At the same time, he is constantly
on the move, shuttling his wife, Zee (Mary-Louise Parker) and two children from
one home to another, living under the name of Howard.
Enter
the Ford brothers, Charley (Sam Rockwell) and Bob (Casey Affleck). Bob is a kid filled with hero worship. He has read every dime novel and newspaper
clipping ever written about Jesse James and desperately wants to follow his
older brother, Charley, into the gang.
Interestingly, in his one encounter with Bob Ford, Frank James found
something strange and uncomfortable, saying the kid "creeps me out." Zee James, too, in her few scenes, displays a
dislike for the young man. Yet, Jesse,
who in all other areas seems to have a sixth sense for danger and betrayal,
allows Bob to stay, even keeping him alone a few days to help the family move
to a new location. Jesse, too, finds the
"hero worship" a bit too much at times, once uttering, "You wanna be like me or
you wanna be me?"
In
the one robbery we see in this film, the James gang members stand along the
railroad tracks wearing ghostly hoods and bandannas covering their faces. It is an eerie image, stirring anticipation
of the shock awaiting the the crew and passengers of the train. As the train approaches, we miss the daring
scenes of mounting so common in westerns.
But once aboard, this Jesse James is brutal and menacing-not at all the
stuff that legends are made on. It provides a harsh awakening for the young Bob
Ford.
For
about the next hour and one-half after the robbery, the film drags on, with
in-fighting among the gang, arousing Jesse's paranoia and leading to more
scenes of Jesse's violent way of handling people who disturb him.
In
his final days, Jesse has only the Ford brothers close to him. The moment of the title event seems almost
surreal. There is almost a sense that
Jesse knew what Bob Ford was waiting to do and deliberately created a moment to
make it possible.
In
this depiction, Bob Ford, not unlike John Wilkes Booth, expected, like Brutus,
to be hailed as a hero. In the
ant-climactic scenes, Ford is shown on stage (with brother Charley playing the
role of Jesse), re-enacting his one bold deed for hundreds of audiences. Yet, he must deal with hecklers who call him
"Coward!" and, in saloons, hear the popular ballad of Jesse James with the reference
to "the dirty little coward who shot Mr. Howard."
As
Jesse is presented in this film, one wonders why Ford didn't get the applause
he anticipated. There is nothing
demonstrated in this telling to show why Jesse James became a figure of both
enduring and endearing legend. It might
have been effective to have shared with the audience some of the stories the
young Bob Ford had found so enchanting.
When Tyrone Power's Jesse fell to an assassin in the classic film, Jesse James (1939), the audience felt
sympathy. When Brad Pitt's Jesse falls,
one can only sigh and think "it's about time."
Pitt's
performance of a brutal, paranoid, nearly-has-been outlaw is on the mark. He bears little resemblance to the real Jesse
until after the death. When the taking
of the famous photographs of the dead outlaw is depicted, Pitt's resemblance to
the real images is striking.
The
film truly belongs to Casey Affleck who runs the full gamut of emotion as Bob
Ford and often displays a sweetness reminiscent of Toby Maguire in the more gentle
moments of the Spiderman films.
Mary-Louise
Parker's brief moments as Zee James are well played, but she is kept very much
in the background. One of the real Zee's
most famous utterances is the sarcastic statement, "I guess it was an
accident," when the Fords quickly tell her Jesse fell by an accidental firing
of Bob Ford's gun. It would have been
nice to have had Parker speak that line.
The
overall theme seems to be Bob Ford's disappointment and dissatisfaction in the
aftermath of his "glorious" deed. That
would have been better presented with an image of Jesse James worthy of
legend.
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